Kumar Harsh

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Kumar Harsh

Kumar Harsh

@krh_harsh

IIT Roorkee •यथा पिंडे तथा ब्रह्माण्डे •Poet An architect by education. Social Entrepreneurship. व्यम् राष्ट्रे जागृयाम पुरोहिताः।

Bengaluru Katılım Eylül 2010
394 Takip Edilen173 Takipçiler
Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
In Bihar, people may joke or make fun of anything and everything - from color to disabilities - but no body is excluded from the 'mainstream' unless the person is "adharmik". In childhood, I can remember we had legendary people in village and nearby named "Langada Baba, Karu/Karuaa, Goruaa, Benga Baba etc, they were respected."
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Siddhartha Anand
Siddhartha Anand@SidAnandTweets·
And while I was in the city, I revisited the Bihar Museum. To rephrase Bill Clinton’s words: “There are two kinds of people in the world:- those who have seen the Bihar Museum and those who have not.”
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Siddhartha Anand@SidAnandTweets

Experienced this firsthand earlier this week during my stay at the same property. It had less to do with Patna and more with the hotel’s policy of hiring specially-abled people. I hope other hotels in the city follow this example.

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Sameer jain
Sameer jain@Sameer_vyapari·
I am still looking for an industrial shed or space for a factory in Bihar Sharif. BIADA doesn't have any space for the same. Kindly share any reference contacts in Nalanda or Bihar Shrif. Also, looking for hiring managers. Young people , eager to learn the SOP of the factory. Interested, DM me for an interview. RT✨
Sameer jain@Sameer_vyapari

Farm to factory .. Jai Bihar Jai Bharat 🇮🇳 Feeling so energetic today! These 50 machines are fully running on MLADA. Wish to add 50 more in the coming 2/3 months. Tomorrow I will visit to see the nearby space / Gowdon. 🤞

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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
@alokawinash बिहार में इससे बढ़िया पूरी बनता है जी, सब्जी भी खाली आलूआ का लग रहा है, कमसे कम परवल, बैंगन, गोभी, कुछ तो रहता है। ई तेल में चुपचुप पूरी से बिहार को बदनाम मत कीजिए। 😁
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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
@thatmarineguy21 Can you share the name of the IT company, by any chance if you happen to know?
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That Marine Guy🇮🇳
That Marine Guy🇮🇳@thatmarineguy21·
The bearded man in the video is a famous Pakistani podcaster, and the person he is speaking to is the head of a major IT company in Pakistan. The IT executive has developed an app that provides a Hindi translation of the Quran, enabling users to gain an understanding of Islam. The interviewer asks him why he chose to create it in Hindi. He replies, "Just imagine: India is a country with a population of 1.3 billion people. If even a single Hindu there were to embrace Islam through my app, think of the immense spiritual merit I would earn! I would attain Paradise; I would be granted 72 houris. What boundless blessings Allah would bestow upon me!" When I searched for this individual on Google, I discovered that he is considered a prominent technocrat in Pakistan and runs three or four companies—yet, just look at his mindset. x.com/jpsin1/status/…
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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
The Hindu "middle class/upper middle class" are the one deeply infested with inferiority complex and craving for identity or superiority. That's why they do such dramas, or dog lover syndrome...all part of wannabe high class syndrome. Hindu middle class is the worst segment of population - selfish, corrupt, devoid of any shraddha, every act comes out their inferiority or show off.
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The Jaipur Dialogues
The Jaipur Dialogues@JaipurDialogues·
यही सेक्युलर कीड़ा हिंदू को डुबाता है वो तुम्हारे शोभा यात्रा पर पत्थर बाजी करें, और हिंदू मुसलमान को हज जाने से पहले माला पहना रहा है Shatru Bodh Missing
Megh Updates 🚨™@MeghUpdates

In Ghaziabad, members of the Hindu community gathered to bid farewell to Muslim pilgrims departing for Hajj, video goes viral

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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
Strategy and tactics both matters. We have seen the disaster of massively impactful personas - Gandhi and Godse. During orientation session of my batch, one officer said, the system is fine with people doing their work honestly, however it punishes those who hold the pride of being honest.
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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
@iAsura_ Adding to my list as well, kindly do share a review.
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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
Sanatana Dharma's core—collective consciousness, *Dharma* as natural order—stands as the single greatest existential threat to the Abrahamic framework. Once Hindus awaken to their unbroken heritage, the deep wounds inflicted over millennia, and the profound wisdom distilled across countless generations, they become genuinely formidable. That resurgence doesn't just empower individuals; it makes the philosophy magnetic, accessible, alive. When the masses truly grasp it, internalize it, live it—what oxygen is left for the Abrahamic model? The entire apparatus collapses: the zero-sum ladders climbed by stepping on others, the engineered exploitation, the consumerism propped up as salvation. The global system—more savage than any jungle, built on sabotage, manufactured fear, relentless extraction—cannot survive widespread Hindu consciousness. So it must be smothered, ridiculed, erased, diluted at every turn. It looks primitive on the surface, but this is no mere culture clash. It's the elemental contest between something organic, rooted, life-affirming for all beings—and a disproportionately dominant, parasitic, fundamentally dark force. It echoes *Fullmetal Alchemist*: the homunculi (artificial embodiments of sin, sustained by stolen human essence, serving a god-complex creator) versus ordinary humans (flawed, mortal, yet capable of genuine bonds, growth, and defiance). One side is engineered superiority masking profound emptiness; the other is authentic, resilient humanity that ultimately dismantles the artificial hierarchy. The parallel is stark.
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Maria Wirth
Maria Wirth@mariawirth1·
Annihilate, eradicate, dismantle... these words were used in different seminars over recent years by academics and politicians. It's obviously not only some Muslim or Christian clergy. It seems a big strategy to get rid of Hinduism, mainly by making Hindus lukewarm and stop them from following it. Why? Imo, the spiritual knowledge here is a danger to the global cult which wants to control, if not enslave, us. Check out my new book if you have time.
xenia 🍂@Malik_asff

"Annihilate Hinduism", seminar organised by Azim Premji University, owner of Wipro. Each one of them are doing their part in every possible ways.

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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
@mariawirth1 Class and savage meets the elegance and knowledge. 😌🙏🏼
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Maria Wirth
Maria Wirth@mariawirth1·
Yes I did during Covid (didn't get Covid) Maybe you don't know that there are patents on its medicinal benefits. One day you may need it. Btw, human urine is used in allopathic medicine... You may prefer .. :)
Hussain@Hussain97066260

@mariawirth1 @PWienerstein69 Have u try Cow pee. Like All hindu drink. You must drink once .you will enjoy

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Pranav
Pranav@Pranav_sharrmma·
In Magahi, we have a term for the system of alphabets called ककहारा And most of us learnt it from mahonar pothi/ मनोहर पोथी
Śaśā́ṅkaḥ श॒शाङ्कः॑@Konkanist

The common way to refer to the alphabet in #Konkani is «कखगघ» ‹kakʰagagʰa› or «अआइई» ‹aāiī›. In #Assamese, it is commonly referred to as «কখগঘ» ‹kokʰogogʰo›. How do you refer to the alphabet in your Indic language?

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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
I have so many idols with decapitated heads that I’ve lost count. One image that still burns in my memory is the Bhojeshwar Mahadev Temple. Islamic invaders tried again and again to smash its Shivalinga, but it was so impossibly strong they couldn’t break it. They even pounded the temple with cannon fire—Top-Gola—but still failed. Because of their endless attacks, Raja Bhoj had no choice but to pour everything into defending his kingdom and the Somnath Temple, so the temple’s shikhara was never built. What cuts deepest is how everyone who visited—including my own batchmates—looked at all this destruction and felt nothing. No pain, no fury, not even a spark of rage. It just didn’t touch them.
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Sameer Rao
Sameer Rao@CivitasSameer·
Damn. I didn't know this was extremely common. Let me know which temple or ruins was a political turning point for you?
Snehal@SnehalRatna

@CivitasSameer Modhera Sun Temple for me.. especially the idols kept at the museum

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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
With social media, internet and now community notes, the libetards stand exposed at every word, and yet how shamelessly they're dedicated, is a thing of wonder. In the words of Modiji "तुम्हारे पाँवों के नीचे कोई ज़मीन नहीं, कमाल ये है कि फिर भी तुम्हें यक़ीन नहीं। (दुष्यंत कुमार)"
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Ankit Jakhar
Ankit Jakhar@Jakhar_ankit_·
> be Puṣyamitra Śuṅga. > literally the Senapati (Commander-in-Chief) who looked at a crumbling empire and said, "Fine, I’ll do it myself." > year is around 185 BCE. The Mauryan Empire has gone soft. Decades of state-sponsored pacifism have left the borders porous and the military demoralised. > The Yavana-Mlecchas (Indo-Greeks from Bactria) are mobilising. They think India is free real estate. > Last Mauryan Emperor, Bṛhadratha, is completely clueless and too weak to defend Āryāvarta. > Puṣyamitra organises a massive military review (Senā-darśana) at Pāṭaliputra. > casually draws his sword and assassinates the Emperor in plain sight of the entire imperial army. > The army doesn't mutiny. They literally cheer for him and declare him the new Samrāt. Absolute Senāpati supremacy. > Western historians cope by calling it a "military coup." Indian history calls it civilizational course-correction. > The Greeks, led by Demetrius and Menander, breach the frontiers and march deep into the heartland, besieging Sāketa (Ayodhya), Mathurā, and threatening Pāṭaliputra itself. > Puṣyamitra drops the hammer. He rallies the fractured Indian forces and utterly obliterates the Hellenistic war machine, driving the Greeks all the way back to the Indus. > Greek phalanxes met Vedic steel, and the Greeks lost. > but wait, he wasn't just a warlord. He was the ultimate restorer of Sanātana Dharma. > single-handedly ended the era of state-enforced religious pacifism and revived the martial and spiritual ethos of the Vedic civilisation. > to assert absolute, unquestionable sovereignty, he revives the ancient 'Aśvamedha Yajña' (Horse Sacrifice). > He didn't do it once. The Ayodhya Inscription confirms he performed the Aśvamedha twice (Dvir-aśvamedha-yājin). Absolute paramountcy. > Let the majestic sacrificial horse roam free across the subcontinent. He puts his teenage grandson, Vasumitra, in charge of guarding it with a contingent of cavalry. > The Greeks try to capture the horse on the banks of the Sindhu river. > Teenage Vasumitra absolutely massacres the seasoned Yavana forces, rescues the horse, and secures the frontier. The Chad bloodline is genetically undeniable. > Puṣyamitra writes a letter to his son Agnimitra basically saying: "Your boy just styled on the Greeks. The horse is safe. Pull up to the Yajña." Peak grandfather flex. > His court was the ultimate intellectual hub. The legendary sage Patañjali - author of the Mahābhāṣya (the greatest treatise on Sanskrit grammar) - was his contemporary and chief priest. > Patañjali literally uses the defeat of the Greeks as a grammar example in his book: “Aruṇad Yavano Sāketam” (The Yavana besieged Ayodhya - implying an event that just happened and was crushed by his patron). > Buddhist texts (like the Aśokāvadāna) cope and seethe, painting him as a villain because he showed zero tolerance for certain monasteries that acted as fifth columns and aided the invading Greek armies. > treason gets you the sword. No exceptions when the civilisation is at stake. > Senāpati, Samrāt, Yavana-Destroyer, Patron of Patañjali, and the architect of the Brāhmaṇical Renaissance. > The man who refused to let India fade into the dark pages of history.
Saurav trades@0xsauravtrades

Pushyamitra Shunga jayanti bhi manayenge hum toh ab.

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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
Yes absolutely mesmerising. I once walked there two hours with a kid 12-13 Y, he took me to almost every weed, every grass, every plant in the gurukul and explained their benefits. And TBH, it felt being jealous...if only I too had similar enviornment when I as young. The kids coming out from there will be disproportionately smart, calm and Dharmik.
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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
@crispeconomiX The rise of Bharat, Bhartiya in anyway is painful, unbearable to them - from economic to existence levels. It is always this: x.com/i/status/20360…
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh

Sanatana Dharma's core—collective consciousness, **Dharma** as natural order—stands as the single greatest existential threat to the Abrahamic framework. Once Hindus awaken to their unbroken heritage, the deep wounds inflicted over millennia, and the profound wisdom distilled across countless generations, they become genuinely formidable. That resurgence doesn't just empower individuals; it makes the philosophy magnetic, accessible, alive. When the masses truly grasp it, internalize it, live it—what oxygen is left for the Abrahamic model? The entire apparatus collapses: the zero-sum ladders climbed by stepping on others, the engineered exploitation, the consumerism propped up as salvation. The global system—more savage than any jungle, built on sabotage, manufactured fear, relentless extraction—cannot survive widespread Hindu consciousness. So it must be smothered, ridiculed, erased, diluted at every turn. It looks primitive on the surface, but this is no mere culture clash. It's the elemental contest between something organic, rooted, life-affirming for all beings—and a disproportionately dominant, parasitic, fundamentally dark force. It echoes **Fullmetal Alchemist**: the homunculi (artificial embodiments of sin, sustained by stolen human essence, serving a god-complex creator) versus ordinary humans (flawed, mortal, yet capable of genuine bonds, growth, and defiance). One side is engineered superiority masking profound emptiness; the other is authentic, resilient humanity that ultimately dismantles the artificial hierarchy. The parallel is stark.

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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
@mariawirth1 Would you be able to share your experience with the students of Bihar? Virtually?
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Kumar Harsh
Kumar Harsh@krh_harsh·
True. As as much I and many people around feel the same devotion, I wonder if it is good for polity & populace at large. If the king were guided and controlled by some seers without being stakeholders - from the pov of Dharma, Samaj, Artha...it would have ben different. Currently the king rules them all. They all are subservient. Do we have a watcher?
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Aishwarya Mudgil
Aishwarya Mudgil@AishwaryakiRai·
I have never seen any leader who not just receives respect and love but pure devotion from people. It is surreal.
Lotus Awakened@SaffronOnX

@mujifren Now they see Modi as a Legit Saviour , they feel safe as of now during the Immense BJP campaign and Central forces deployment

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